Broken Souls (The Chronicles of Mara Lantern, Book 2) (26 page)

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Authors: D.W. Moneypenny

Tags: #Contemporary Fantasy

BOOK: Broken Souls (The Chronicles of Mara Lantern, Book 2)
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“I thought you went to the bathroom. I saw you go upstairs,” Diana said.

“I did go upstairs, and then I came down again,” she said.

Diana stared at her blankly for a second, then dismissed her confusion and turned back to the television screen. “Those poor people look like the walking dead. I’m just glad there haven’t been any reports of this thing here in Oregon City.”

“Those TV reporters aren’t going to come down here even if there are cases in Oregon City. They’ve got plenty of footage right in their backyard,” Mara said. “Can we turn that off? It’s kind of making me nauseated.”

“I guess now that you guys are home, I can stop torturing myself about it,” Diana said. She pointed the remote at the screen, and it went black.

Headlights swept across the living room window as a car made a U-turn and parked at the curb directly out front. The silhouettes of two people popped up on each side of the car and made their way to the porch.

“I wonder who that could be?” Diana said as she walked over to the door, flipping on the front porch lights, and opening it. “Melanie and Denton! What brings you two here?”

“We heard you had a friend with a case of that illness that is going around, and wanted Denton to come over and take a look,” Melanie said.

Diana waved them in and turned to glare at Mara as she closed the door. “I think there must be some kind of mistake. Has there been a mistake,
sweetie
?”

Mara’s face reddened. “No, Mom. I asked Ping to give them a call. It’s for Buddy.”

Diana pointed at the couch. “You two have a seat while I sort this out with my daughter in the kitchen.” She tilted her head toward the kitchen.

“We don’t need to go in the kitchen, Mom. I went by to check on Buddy, and he was in his apartment all alone, and he’s got this thing, this shedding. I couldn’t leave him by himself, and I knew you wanted us to get home.”

“So instead of staying up in the disease-ridden city, you bring the disease home with you. What were you thinking?”

“I was thinking my friend needed my help and that you would understand eventually. I couldn’t just leave him.”

“So you not only exposed your little brother and me to this disease, you exposed Melanie and Denton to it as well. Don’t you think you should have asked us if we wanted to take this risk?”

“Ping told the Proctors about Buddy, didn’t he?” Mara turned to look at them.

“Yes, Ping told us your friend was suffering from this shedding sickness. Yes,” Denton said.

“Where is Buddy?” Diana asked.

“He’s up in my bed.”

“How did you . . . No, don’t tell me.” She turned and left the room, stomping up the stairs without another word.

Mara turned to the Proctors. “I’m sorry for involving you in this little family thing. You guys got here much sooner than I anticipated, and I didn’t have an opportunity to break the news to my mother.”

“We understand,” Melanie said with a smile. “We have mothers too.”

She caught Denton’s eye. “I know you usually touch people when you heal them. Does that make you susceptible to whatever ailment they have if it is infectious?”

“Not under normal circumstances, but this black mist that they are talking about on television, it’s unlike any transmission mechanism where I come from. I have no way of knowing if my natural defenses are up to staving it off, but I’m willing to give it a try.”

Diana walked back down the stairs and into the living room, her face pale and drawn. “Oh, my goodness, that poor boy. This thing looks ten times worse in person.”

“I can’t ask you to take that kind of risk, even for Buddy,” Mara said.

“I take a risk whenever I do this. Even in my own world, there were risks. It’s a part of who we are,” Denton said.

“This ability you pass on to people, you said you don’t normally tell people about it, right?”

“That’s correct. I don’t want to burden them with some sense of obligation at a time when they are at their weakest.”

“It’s important to me that we not tell Buddy. I don’t think he could handle it, and I’m afraid a lot of people might abuse him if it got out.”

“I think we can all agree to keep it to ourselves.”

“There are no other side effects to this?”

“None whatsoever. If it works, he’ll feel healthy again, happy to be a contributing member of the community again.”

“Okay. Do you want to take a look at him?” Mara pointed the way to the staircase.

Melanie and Denton followed Mara up the staircase.

Diana tapped Sam’s shoulder as he moved to follow them. “I think it might be a good idea if we waited down here.”

Locking eyes with his mother, he said, “Mara might need us. We should be there.”

“Only if we stay in the hall. I don’t want to crowd Denton and Buddy.”

Sam nodded.

Upstairs, Mara entered her room and walked to the end of the queen-size poster bed. Melanie followed and stood beside her while Denton approached from the left side, now facing the door to the room. He sat on the edge of the mattress and stared down into Buddy’s gray marbled face. Tiny fissures spidered across his cheeks, glistening black and wet in the muted light of the room.

“Are you sure you want to do this?” Mara asked. Melanie patted her arm.

Sam and Diana approached, stood in the doorway but did not enter.

Denton nodded and leaned over, placing his palms on Buddy’s shoulders and closed his eyes.

In the doorway, Sam lifted his arm and pointed the back of his smartphone toward the bed. Diana tried to pull down his arm, but Sam stepped sideways out of her reach. She glared at him, but he was looking too intently at the tiny screen to acknowledge her ire. Not wanting to make a scene, Diana relented and turned her attention back to the bed.

Denton’s head hung loosely over Buddy’s torso, suspended by the two arms pressing down on his shoulders. Nothing appeared to be happening, but Sam gasped. Melanie turned to lift a finger to her lips.

On the tiny screen, Sam could see wisps of black mist streaming out of every opening in Buddy’s head: his mouth, his nose and his ears. The vapor coiled in midair between Buddy’s and Denton’s faces for a moment and darted toward the healer. Sam’s eyes widened, and he opened his mouth to voice a warning, but the streaming blackness appeared to hit an unseen barrier inches from Denton’s cheek, breaking up into billowing clouds that roiled back in the direction from which it had come.

To confirm what he was seeing, Sam’s eyes flitted up, looking directly at the bed, but he could see no mist, no billowing fog rolling against the invisible barrier around Denton’s head. Glancing back at the screen, Sam confirmed that the blinking Record icon still flashed.

Then a hand swept across the screen, a transparent hand extending into the frame from the direction where Mara stood.

Sam pivoted, pointing the lens in the back of the device toward his sister. Standing next to her was Buddy, a ghostly transparent Buddy with tears running down his cheeks, clearly in a panic, pleading and waving his arms, trying to get Mara’s attention. Again Sam gasped, and his mother grabbed his shoulder. He wiggled away from her grasp, kept the camera on his sister and the apparition that continued to beg silently next to her. Mara turned around, pressed her lips into a thin line and widened her eyes at him in warning.

On the bed, the grayness of Buddy’s skin faded into a more natural white pallor and the blackened cracks in this skin narrowed and closed up somewhat. Denton clenched his jaws and pressed his eyes closed as beads of sweat erupted on his forehead. One droplet slid down his cheek. His entire frame trembled.

Melanie looked concerned, headed toward her husband at the far side of the bed and stopped midstep as Buddy’s eyes snapped open, revealing orbs of solid black onyx, the whites, pupils and irises consumed by inky, lipid night. Tears the color of blood brimmed above the lower lids. His cracked lips trembled, then drily turned up at the corners. The head tilted slightly as if looking askance at Mara, and the baritone voice lisped almost imperceptibly, “I survive.”

“Buddy?” Mara asked, her voice trembling.

He slowly swayed his head against the pillow.

“I am many now. I am everyone, everywhere.” His blackened eyes shone brightly, and he sighed, seemingly gratified.

“Who are you?”

“Soon I will be you. I will be all of you.” His voice trailed off, and Buddy’s eyelids closed.

Melanie reached for her husband and tried to pull him away, but he would not budge as if his hands were fused to Buddy’s shoulders. She reached down to pry his hands open, grazing Buddy’s chest with her fingers. She fell back with a jolt, staggering away from the bed and striking the bedroom wall. Mara ran to her as she was about to slide to the floor, propping her up by the elbow until she could get her balance.

“What happened?” Mara asked.

Melanie looked across the room blankly at her husband and Buddy. “Emptiness. That poor boy is gone. There is no soul there, only corruption and decay.”

“What are you saying? He’s sick, but clearly he’s not dead.”

“I’m telling you, the essence of who that boy was is gone. Call it a soul or call it a spirit or whatever you want. It is not there,” she said. She pulled away from Mara and returned to her husband’s side. “Denton, I want you to stop.” She was about to once again intervene physically when her husband lifted his hands. He slumped over with his head resting on his knees as he sat on the side of the bed.

Mara stepped closer. “Mr. Proctor? Are you okay?”

He looked up and nodded. “I’m okay, but I think your friend is in trouble. It appears I’ve bought him a little time, but I get the sense that, while he is in the grip of this thing, he will continue to deteriorate.”

Melanie helped her husband stand and guided him to the doorway. “His body cannot sustain itself without a soul.”

“What are you talking about?” Mara asked. “How can he not have a soul if he is still alive? That makes no sense at all. Where did Buddy’s soul go?”

Sam lowered his cell phone to let the Proctors exit the room and said, “He’s standing right next to you, sis.”

Mara looked out of the corner of her eye to the space next to her. “What?”

“Buddy. He’s standing right there,” Sam said.

 

CHAPTER 38

 

 

When Mara and Sam entered the living room, Melanie and Denton Proctor were pulling on their coats, clearly intent on leaving immediately. As Diana turned to open the front door, someone on the other side knocked on it. She opened the door to see Ping standing on the front porch and said, “Mr. Ping, what a surprise that my daughter failed to mention that you would be stopping by.”

“I apologize if this is a bad time. Perhaps I should have called first,” Ping said sheepishly.

“Don’t be silly. You’re always welcome. The Proctors were just leaving,” she said, conducting a little traffic management by waving the couple out, stepping onto the porch with them and holding the door for Ping to go inside. He nodded to the departing guests and entered the house.

“Are the two of you okay to drive? I wish you would take a few minutes to catch your breath before taking off,” Diana said.

“We’ll be fine. I want to get Denton home so he can rest. I’ll give you a call tomorrow, to check in on you, the kids and Buddy.”

“I appreciate the risk the two of you took for him. It was incredibly brave and risky.”

They nodded and walked into the night toward their car.

Inside the house, Sam was showing Ping the recording he made of the events in the bedroom, pointing and narrating enthusiastically as it played. Mara sat slumped in an armchair, her eyes scanning the room as if she were trying to find something elusive.

Diana walked up to stand behind Sam and looked over his shoulder.

“And you couldn’t see any of this in the room?” Ping said.

Diana shook her head. “None of it was visible to the naked eye. The only indication anything was going on at all is Buddy’s condition and that awful voice coming out of him.”

“Was it a deep voice with a lisp?” Ping asked.

“Yes. How did you know?” Diana asked.

“We heard it come from one of the patients at the hospital today, didn’t we, Mara?”

Diana tensed up and glared at Mara.

“Way to rat me out to my mom, Ping,” Mara said. She held her hand up to her mother. “Yes, I went to the hospital with Ping and Bohannon, the detective guy from the plane crash. He wanted us to take a look at the patient they think was the first exposed to this shedding thing.”

“I do not understand why you insist on exposing yourself to these situations, and I certainly don’t understand why you persist in lying to me about it.”

“I haven’t actually lied per se. I’ve just not had time to bring you up to speed. Anyway you two adult-types keep telling me that I have to embrace my metaphysical destiny. Well, it looks like that happens to include vaporous diseases from other dimensions. What would you have me do? Abandon my friend? Not help the authorities figure out what is going on? What? Tell me, and I’ll do it.”

“Look, here’s the part with Buddy’s ghost,” Sam said, pushing the phone in front of Mara.

“That is not his ghost. He’s not dead.” Mara said, pushing away the phone.

Diana pushed her hair over her ear and appeared to ratchet down her anger a bit. “I don’t know what to tell you. I think you could do a better job keeping me in the loop, especially when you are about to risk your life or your brother’s.”

“Okay, I promise. Whenever I risk our lives, I’ll give you a heads-up.”

“I would prefer you not do it at all.”

“Believe me, I would prefer it as well.”

“I would prefer her to not risk my life at all,” Sam said.

Diana pointed to the couch. “Ping, have a seat. I’ll go throw together some soup and sandwiches.” She went to the kitchen.

Mara looked across the room tiredly and asked, “What do you think is going on, Ping?”

“I rewatched the bank video, and I talked to Bohannon after you left. That voice you heard come out of the security guard at the hospital, deep and lispy? It’s Juaquin Prado’s voice. He has a mild speech impediment and that distinctive baritone that seems so incongruous with it. Bohannon played that recording of the little girl at the hospital for some of Prado’s coworkers, and each of them swore it was him.”

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